Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864, February 26, 1850, Image 2

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ffcj’4 JU* '•WWg papers | '?tfo.‘*—Thd Legislature of disgraced itsojfe—orteWt acts of groan inyfirnprioly ? are sorry to say tlmt the WJiig jJM* erd.llio nr,tors in ono of them. The two parties came to irreconcilable disagreement about a districting bill, and tlio Whigs withdrew in ft bs»dv, £wo days Jn succession, thus leav-, ivig ihu House without !! quorum. This i* tlie •01mm. Ji.'ro of the Morning News.) To Mariners. {SEW-VORK, Fob. 21; If SO. „ TfetoaLs^ncK*, islandr and danobm. wfc*i »* "••••' i>>“ i!sa™pi‘ , i5a' 1 orkftegtweeki on tbftiuUMst of, l£»i>Gazette, tStli inst , - . 2 , r .1 . . Enclosed is the meznofanduin of tho aitn n ti„„ „ . ami muft^} oonc^iion,for tl:6 &uko. thateveral ahdils, rocks iaitad«, and dangers. n n ,] I * • *■ * ® ’ -» * '*» *1-1*4. r»T IidoUm within mv . ait * 'I itv a* The New» by the Steamer. - Wo received yesterday' afternoon, about 5 o’clock, frnnr our correspondont, In Brill more, WO teloga-aphi* dejportchft*, 'announcing tfc arri val of tho America at Halifax, and giv- inf tho qUotationrof the Liverpool cotton mark- .«M. Being 24 hours behind, their time, of ' cetino they arc bf no use to us. The only discrepancy hettvecn our .dispatches mid those idled by' our cotem- ,ing, is in tho amountof states the sales of the iling of the steamer, at 99,000 halos for tho two the Charleston despatches, by tho America, are to nd and Mobile Cotton Fair Origans, at 7jd.—Maf- Mor.cy rtafket was deposed, bullion >n the Bunk ef Huginnd lined. The rotes of discount cent. Consols closed at 054 American socurities were steady prices. , Parliament jt f owr on the ftlijjt ult. There giorfng in Pari#/ Tho British blockaded tho Grecian ports. ' No news of intorest has transpir- Whig share of' the wrong doing.’ Thrt DnmocftiilS part Wifs meroly a wordy contest belwocn ’ two indmborst ono of whom finally struck tlic other on fhe head with an umhrclltt*“lhia Cn the floor of the House, too. W» bolievo tho editor » lightly mistaken in tho latter count pf his indictintnt. I ho um- brellai scene did not occur oo the floor of the tioqse butfn Democrulic caucus. In tho midst {ff t shower of words ono gentleman merely extondod hi* umbrella over tho head of his fel low member. ’This was not quite so bn.cl. ns bur. ling a glass tumbler at the head of his antago nist. in debate, which outrage was perpetrated only some ton day since, on tho floor of tho New York legislative Hall wbilo the House wiis in session. If Georgia has for once forgotton thb precepts of her motto', it Ill become New York to cal! hor hard names. It is un old say- itearnuu' Isabel, Capt. touched off our bar. on " h“c mail* and pas- hoard a steamer. Rv of Havana datos to ho found under our HP allow tho citizens no time tic save their property, and insmno instances hardly sufficient to escape from their burning houses. Dr. Mac Kir:, who but a short time before had -boon burnt out, was taken completely by surprise in his chamber, hud lost his iurnitufqj' books, watch, apd even his wearing apparel; and but for tho groat presence of mind, and gencrousdevotion qf one of his servants, would , in ajl probability have perished himsolf. The lower story of tho building was an fire,- and tho stairway having boon consumed ( there seemed no possible moans of escape. In this critical juncture his faithful servant came to his side, and seising a featherbed, throw it from tho window, then throwing his master upon it, ho sprangfrpm the window 'himself. Neither tho Doctor nor tho hoy received any injury. ing that “people who live-in glass houses should not throw stones.’,’ We think that people who throw glass tumblers should hoed the same ad monition. 'i '>' A 4 tP 3 Letfty |be-Monk of La Trappo, was mobbed in St. Lapis on the 1^th inst. Florida Myfise.—The citizens of Gadsr den county, Fla* without distinction of party, are to meet at Quincy, on tho 2 3id,.February, to trike the Accessary steps to have Floida fepre- sonted in tho Nashville Convention. H3F° Father Mathew arrived at Montgom ery, Ala. on the 21st inst. Jenny meeting Is so be held on Monday night, nl Cos- tie Garden, •composed of nil parties—politics arO to be eschewed, for the nance, and nothing but ports prir.rioti*m'i*tob<fspoutedi Th« call J »ri observation. Thinking it would bo lor the grpl'i^ ’I uofittr nf nnviirntfiva tn Vtfivo tit dm nnbliub«.i t I you . n: 1 .. . , ... , . commerce, and the safety < has already received several thousand signa- '' Momoraiuhltn of sundry rocks urifshoals noth j down in Horsburg's Director£ or JJharts • ’ ** tU‘s Davenport’s .Julia, Inst u'ty plaudits of a large and lienee. -‘She hiij^ sustained lions which hud been induced precluded 'her, and was by Mr. NEAjFU5,.as Sir ,as well os by th”e expellont stock aompauy. She iiuikes her second up- Da«u1creeottees.~.Wo called inst^syittlays since the DagosriBOflf Booms^ of $Ir. W. V. FRENtiCK,cdVtler of St- Juliaq Street and Mar ket Square, whore we saw sefiio yery fine spsc- imens, among them sr vdiul excellent likenesses of citizens of SfitVantiuh. Mr. f*BENTiCE has .flttod up hi* rooms exfiresely for a DnguiSrrian ^alien', ahcl hasTfritretlucocl, n sky-light which affurds blp} thS^est facilities for taking superior pictures at aikhoQrs of the day. Lino.—Mr. Baknuh publishes a card in the New York papers,-in which ho statos that he has ratified the engagement made by his agent with Jenny Lind, oltbeugh ho did not ^contemplate paying the Additional expense of her two musical associates. Ha'says tbitthe ludy has declined many better offers thnn tlie one accepted frouj him, having a great anxiety, to visit tho Onited States. 1 , Barnum does hot say that lie is to givo Jen ny tho enormous Bum set down in tho papers, but he daps not deny the report. Ho knows the American public too well for that, and would rather that they would bolievo that he is to give her $3,00,0,000, than that lie had ob tained her servivees for anything like a- reason able sum. ... An Ewpement.*—The Boston papers con tain an dccount of tho elopement of a Mrs, Tt- bon, of New York, with a returned Californian by the name of Green. The parties had resided,' at the American House in New York, And 'the runaway pair were pursued by the injured husband to Boston, whore bo-fbund them living teg.'ther as man and wife, in great style, at tho Retterc House. The elopest is said to be very fashionable and of course very beautiful, and the eloper »ery rich. The man with the horns had theih ' arrested, an,J' finally arranged the matter by relinquishing um ' his truant wife to his rival for a consideration, it is said, and the whole party returned to Now- York,in fcompany, Mr. TYron is not a philos opher but a dancing master. ' His course is a striking iHustrution of tho humanizing influence of the polite accomplishment which he teaches, and remiiids us of a couplet -we have heard in colored circles hereabouts, which runs, “Oh if 1 had a ’captions wife, As sqre as 1 am bqrn, I’d take her down to Sew Ohioans And trade her off for com.” safety of. navignters to have them published tow I firm a column of your valnoble^paper, I hand the. as® nimercc, ami tlio eafety of tlio fiailor. * 1 °* > Another. ■few. ■in ^Congress.—Col. .t. W Jftcksoh, whb has‘been elected to Congress to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Ilon. Thne. Butler King, is ono of the odi- tork of the Savannah Georgian. CoLJ. com-' miinded the GoorgiaJRegimontauring the Mexi- qpn war.—Norlkem Exclumge/> - ' Col. Jus. \Y. Jackson, recently elected fo Congress frqm'.tliis District, has for a short time past JSi^eS, with ability, thoeditorial chair >>f our, cdtoinporary, tho Georgian, taking A Widower Hungarian Refugee.—The Tribune states that Madame . Messenhauser, tho widow of the unfortunate - Commander of Vienna, during the memorable days qf October, arrived iu New York city some days since, with throe children, She parted from husbunij some days before he was executed, by the mqskets ofl’rinoq Windischgratz, and has now sought a rqfuge in this, country. the place of his nephew, Col. TIenRV Jack- son; Who was elected by the last legislature, The Webster Trial a«d tre Public .The Boston papers suggest thb propriety of trying Webster, oh tho charge of murdering Packman, in some room larger than that in which thoSSuoremo Court sits—the Trepioiit Temple, the Melpd^on, and others uinmentinn ed. The trial of the Spanish pirates, in that city, was 1 held in a lecture room. Tho Attor« ney General hns called George Bemis, Esq., to aid him, it is said, in the trial. Judge-df’the Sifpcrior t Court ’of this Judicial District. Jit was the Inttbr gentlemaq who cemfrmiided the Georgia Regiment in the lute Mexicqa war. Judge Jackson was, we believe, the youngost Col. in-the service, as he is now among tlie youngest Judges on the boiich.. fjp’ Another Explosion.—Tho boiler in tho Stump Foundry of Messrs. Brown & Mu- tlilrs, of Nile, near Detroit, exploded Tbuis ‘day morning, blowing the building to atoms, a,nd b'lrying beneath its ruins several persons, many of whom were dreadfully mangled, but nonekitlid. -a. The end of the Bridge Case.—Tho "/•Charleston Courier of Saturday says—The ‘ hopes of our old friend Schultz, whoso suc cess ia the gijput Bridge Caso H&fiConsidered by himself certain, some, time since, and so heralded in pur paper, have boon crushed. He writos us by ^olograph from Washington, un der date 2 fit inst., 4.40 P. M., as fallows: ‘Justice M’LeaN, at this moment (12 o'clock) delivered a decision against me. All is lost.” A Steamer Missed.—The steamer Walker, which left Mobile for . Vein £Jnu, with the Hon. MrvLeteller, Minister to Moxico, and suitq, as passengers, about a month sinco, has not been heard from, and it hoiOg understood she was to return immediately, some anxiety is.be ginning to bo faSt foi- Jvcr safetv. t iCom PeunambuoO.—By an arrival at Salenrii **(VIa6S*» advices hdivo been received iVom Per* numbuco to th*22d of January. Several deaths from Yello w^ovar had recently occurred among tho shipping, causing Considerable alarm at whore it first appeared, having been there by slaves. The mortality is sajd ighlful; ’fluid, unloss it soon.disappears, iously chock business, dnd ■ prevent ’coming to the city. The Rebellion, iu interior is still unsupfh ossed. ‘ Jefferson DaVis has been elected I arhr’fi om the State of Mississippi, Gaines case, which has beeu in ia N ow^rlqpna, for a number pf bn r 'the2|p_ti^?” ^ As«- It is rather disgusting than amusing to read tho rumors daily put forth ‘by tho Wash-, ington correspondents of some of the more vi olent northern journals. The LippUrdiuri gjnist story, which wo pulilished a few days since, has beeji followed by inventions of even a more fearful character. From tlie Northern papers w'e hoar of many anti-southern heroes at the South, and-if wo,could believe what we rend, we^ wouli come to the conclusion that there was nbt only a laqk of unanimity of sen timent among us, hut' that the better, roost in telligent and patriotic portion of our people Would promptly take sides with the North, should things*come to tho unhappy issue which now threatens us. The following,' which we fifcd in the correspondence of that aabid Anti- gouthem,paper, tho Philadelphia North Aroeri- c.an, is a specimen of this sort, of gossip. The vfrritersays: % Z ■ • '* It is stated .that Gen. Armstrong, late U. 8- Consul at Liverpool, to Whom Geti. Jackson bequeathed the sword which lie wore at the • battle of New Orleans, recently declared, in conversing upon the prenosed Southern Con vention, if that body should adopt measures contemplating a dissolution of the Union, he would unsheath the swj^rd, rally the people of Tennessee to expell it, as entertaining treason able design. It is certainly very kind in Gen. Armstrong, to give us notice of his heroic intentions, and to inform us of the weapon lie designs using, on tne occasion. cures. The adoption of Clay’s resolutions will doubtless ho advocated, which appear to he very satisfactory to whig* mid locofocos. It wiH be a novelty at leust to hear Domocrnts commending tho efforts of tho great embodi ment of whiggery. , The purlieus of the Custom House are in a state of .comparative quietude just now, for Un cle Sam hus announced his ubility to pay the last month’s salary of tho employees i and on Saturday it is supposed it will bo forthcoming. The Hon of the town to-day, is the British Min- !is'Jjr, Sir Her.ry Lytien Bulwer; ho is on a vis it to Mr. Barklov, iheBrilish Consul. There is nothing particularly striking in his personal ap pearnnee, he neither looks nor dresses so well as his brother, the novelist, , Barnum has published a letter stating that he has ratified the Agreement made by his agent with Jenny Lfiiif, I understand that she has expressed a wish to reside out of the cities, du ring the intervals between her concerts. She has A horror of being lionized. Her letter to. Barnum hits been set in an clegapt frame, and is now exhibited to tlie visitors at the Mnso- *Tho Indy is a neat and graceful writer. Another of the victims of the Hague-street ca lamity died on Monday. His name was Metrit, brother-in-law to tho noble litrlo fellow, Tindall. A man named Roberts, reported as missing, has turned up within a duy or two; he did not work in the establishment at the tinjD. The ice in the North river *is rapidly yielding to the warm weather, and unless we have an other cold spell, navigation will soon be Open. To-day is lovely; we almost fancy that we had given March the goby; but I presume the old follow will he down upon us. The Sun Mutual Insurance Company of this city lose about $75,000 by the late fire at Now Orleans; tlieir loss was supposed at first to be considerably larger. Another effort is being mado to bring the in- fartr ousCapt. Rynders to trie!, for a violent as sault on Mr.Reynolds; but-the prosecutor enn- notbe found. He-has brohahly been bought over, oris afraid toRppear; and thus the ruffian and his party escape punishment. So desperate are they, that the life of a prosecutoY wouldn’t Name. Clnytuu'a Shoal;..,,....,. l'urlsT ) Vergns > Perhaps tlio same A skoal. J Sylph' Hocks, •• A Shonl. A Hank, 3 fathoms A Shoal. A Hock Stormy Island...... 8 38 N Owen’s Shoal............... 8 08 N Albion’s Hank, 14 feet11 57 N A Shoal., ......... 758N A Shoal........’ 9 54N A spot gveon water, to nppoar- unces a Bank or Shoal.9 26 N ltomun’s Shoal,.-. —........ 3 24 30 A Shonl in Palawan 1100 N A Shoal iu the Ohiria Sea,.... 9 48 N South Watcher, 5 37 S llobltoySh’H Ship lost in ? 2 52,N A Shoal,.... J Gil la pass, ’42 > 12 00 N Thomas Perkimi’ Shoal, 00 30 N Bank C. S. 9 fathoms 7 36 N A Hock, 10 36 N Burrow’s Island..., ..ill 59 S A Shoal off Panoy....h'....9 58 52 N A Shoal........., 11 02 tf A Shoal in Mindomsea......11 50 N A Shoal 15 20 S A Rock—PhIo Losing..,...7 17 30 N A Rock 7r. 16 59 N (Another papor says Ion. 2630 with a reef extending from it 2J- cable lengths due East) Governor Shook in Pitt’s Pas sage ?. -.1 20 S A t on gitui3c 111 zil mi W7 40 k 110 20 K Gl 50 l US 01 E 117 10 E U4 50 l 108 30 E 109 54 E 109 04 t 117 39 E 108 91 E corrected. 108 40 E 113 45 E 129 18 E . ll« .09 E 168 30 E 181 41 E JfB 41 E 122 99 S 45 00 » 101 S E 21 301V sage - -.1 at) a 120 81 E A Shoal, (5 fathom to 9 feet).. 0 40 N 107 34 v Ship Inntho Shoal 5 54 N 145 39 E 15 35 W 117 19 E 68 15 W 68 00 W 42 39 W ;be. jyorthmoch* The Hudson rivet Railway promises to ho a Kip' Tho torn of Elrabrn, N. Y., was visit ed with a dostryctive tiro on Sunday the 18th inst. Tho loss is estimated at $30,001), which is partially covered by insijrarifce. ^Supposed to be the work of aft incendiary, KP’The Boston Republican, (aFree Soil pa per) of the 20lh inst., says—VV% learn that nt a private moeting held in this city, by the few who give direction to affairs, it has been decid ed to abundqn. the Wilmot proviso. Counterfeiters.—TE. W. Dunn, his wife und another woman, were arrested wpek be fore last, at Alton, Illinois, on suspicion of car rying on “bogus making;” an extensive lot of the. commodity, in the semblance ot Mexican dollars, five-frane pieces, American half dollars, &c., was found in the house, togethor with im plements for the work. Dunn has been living in Alton about five years—apparently wealthy -—building houses—living in good style—ac counted ‘‘one of the first men,”&c. Precious Stones in California.—In tho letter of Mr. Durivage, wo find also the follow ing:— A good deni of stir was made here, a few days ago, relativp to the discovery of “Opals” A “sporting gentleman” in town had a large number of^opals’’ in their native state, 'flnd it was said tjfey camo from tlift valley of the* 1‘uumiin. Nothing positive, Ijpwever, has trail spired, pnd there is much tloftbt whether they were not imported here. t Mpreincnt in lltwaua.—Vf e learn frqm a letter to the New Orleans Picayune,jjfbted Felirunry 8th; that’ large reinforcements of 8{fhn ish troops up* consramly arriving from Spain gt HUvauii... Th.e'Soleruno arrived ahbut Jan ■ary ,27tlj, with 200 sailors fur La Pavla,*u SpanLh frigate in the harbor. i~ Coffee and its substitutes.—The natu ral effect of the pi-eseut very high price of Cof fee is to diminish the consumption. At Cincin nati the consumption is said to liavo faRpn off more than one half sinco tlie late' rise, and at New Orleans, a ^Vriter in tho Bulletin thinks that the sales are diminishing more than ono- third, or even olio half. Ho gives the avorage stocks on the is<? %i February for five years iu- that city, ut 20,000 sacks; now they are esti mated at 75,000 to 80,000. 'With reference to deficient cr.ops und decreased consumption a correspondent of tlfe Cincinnati Gazette has a word to say'. AHmilting that tlie yield of 1849,yin Java and Rio, is less by 800,000 bags than was that of .1,848, he reasons that 200,000 bags of this deficiency will probably he made .up from portions of tlio old crop Jield over in the shell in consequence of the low prices of 1843, and that tho diminished con sumption, in Europe and America, in conse quence of the high prices of 1849-50, avill.be equal to 400,000 bags; which two items will re duce the deficiency of last year’s crop, in effect, to 200,000 bags. The Gazette adds! “In the country, we understand, the usual substitutes for coftee, when prices are high, hnvo been extensively resorted to, viz: ryo, corn, barley, potatoes, and sasofras. In thi3 city, ut mostofthoretail groceries in the outBr purts of town, burnt rye arid corn are now regular articles of sale; and a mixture of about equal purts of coffee, corn and rye, curefully burnt, is exposed at some of the larger groce ries in the central ports of the city, and sells at something less thou one half tho price of coffee alone. . This last preparation, we are told, is not lit all unpalatable.” Tlie receipts of coffee at,Oincmnnti, from the 1st of September to tho present time, are 33,- 502 hugs against 36,820' same time last year. highly profitable enterprise. It is now "only open to Poughkeepsie, and the income Is said .to he $1,300 per day. A speculator hasoffered to lease tho whole road at a rent of$l,500,000per annum, or $5,o60 a day, (Sunday not included.) Thfe stockholders \yould realize by this nvrang- ment 15 per conr. The offer has been refused. Twelve persons have died of cholera,on Ward’s Island; it is confined entirely to emigrants, and floes not create any apprehension. A movement has been made^however, in the Common Coun cil; having in view the cleunliness of the city, and the Board of Health will, early in the season, make the necessary sanitary regulations. That we shall have another visitation next Summer, I have no doubt, hut precautionary measures will at least partially disarm tho-monster, . TheEuropa and Herman steamers left yester day for Europe; the former took out 43,089 and the other 23,667 letters^ Tlio Crescent City leaves this afternoon, for Chagres; every berth has been engaged, I am informed. The contributions for the Hague-street suf ferers amounted to $21,025. The benefit at tho Opera Hguso was a comparative failure. I pre sume the’ aristocracy, thought that it would not he fashionable to attend on such an occasion, for there wds scarcely a subscriber present. An iron steamer for the Panama Railway Qo. has just been completed in this city, she is in tended to run on tho Chargres river. Length 110 feet; width 23 ; depth 3£, and only draws 12 inches of water. The frameof a steamer, intendoil forSam’i L Mitchell’s lino to Savannah, 1ms just Leon rais ed in*Webb’s building yard. The work is progressing rapidly. I mentioned in my last the rumored applica tion of Forrest for a divorce; ho is ngw in Haris* burgh it is said, and will appeal to the Legisla ture of Pennsylvania to dissolve the union. $ CIIARLEMAC A Skoal, (latitude 1 52, Ion. 8f miles west ol’ Gasuar Island) A Shoal 26 N A Shoal...., .....4 13 30 S A Shoal; { ^haps the sumo } ^ ^ % A Shoal. - 33 19 N A Shoal, If miles Manelipa Euatcrn Bass............. A Short 6 57 8 121 31 E Another North pointof Parley ESE.. South pointof Mindoro North 2} miles |4NW from Raif on the high lands, called tho Hammock, is a beacon prtntedwhite. . Mny 8th, 1843. North point of Puney ENE 41 miles, the Suuthern Islund of Cayosi Groupe, bearing South 24 miles, passed over a "coral shoal in 9 fathoms, in' ship Naples of Salem. i ulo Supata, bearing WNW 15 miles, is a dangpr- ous coral short, on which the ship Christopher Han son was lost; crew brought into Manilla. A coral short In the Straits of Sundy, N 63} W from the Button, N 374 E from the south point of. Shwurt the way, and N 52 deg. E from the nom point «f tho same Island; from this shoal the most southerly point of Sulpiiis Island Was just on with ■ the most northerly point of Pulo Bessey 2f ftithoim. Distasioo to Ote-IkltUm 1^-milps. China Sea—new shoal Ion ,107 27, lat laid down i». I paper 133 deg. S.(thiBisamisprint,perhaps,13 03W.) " Booby Island, in Sorry Straits, ,iB stored with pre visions and fresh water for shipwrecked'seamen. Eng lish ship Ann Eliza, passed over two^ corai shoals or honks, one lat 8 05, Ion 110 27 E; thd’Bther to 1st Til N. Ion 110 21 E. 1848, a rock lat 42 52 N., long, 2611 W., Western I Ocean—There is a light house erected on Cape Aqul- lar. 1850, a short lat, 20 28 8., Ion 37 28 W. , OB' Charleston Bare South Edisto. light ship N.' h; W, 12 miles, is a shoal of 17 feet There is Said to be a short spot about half a mile I from the entrance point to' Cape Laquillas. * A ruck vijider water 15 deg. due N, from N. point of Island of Tillangchong, (Necobars.) A largo rock under Wafer in the l’reparis passage. (Bay Bengal) lat.'15 30, long. 92 58 E. A reef of half a mile was crossed by ship Loam in Deo.' 1848, where the bottom was seen and »uppo(. ed about5'fathoms; nearby had the app-aranceof being near the surface of tht) water, lat. 4 04 N. Ion. 94. 40. Tryal rocks, seen by a Dutch ship in 1836, lat. JO.' 35, Ion 107.37. * . .' A rock was seen in 1824, in lat 0.05, long. 23 2545, sec. W. A sand bank was seen near the Equator, lat 1.01 S, Ion. 19.00 \V., in the track pf vessels outward bound. A rock was seen in August, 1834, lat 38. 26 H., long. 30.25 10 see. W. A rock was seen in August, in 1840; let 37.5620 sec. N., long. 33.48 W. * License Law in Wisconsin.—In Wisconsin, Mrs.' Ldvicy Keyser has - recovered $100 damageSvOfJose.pb.IIeath, lbY selling *rum to her.husband, who got the delirium tremens. Liquor dealers in I hat. State have,. by law, to give bonds to pay fggfat injury gfoiittf out fcf their name.* t -resE .Naval.—The following was the position of the U. S. squadron in- tho Mediterranean on tho 4th Jun t :— At Naples—Tho Independence frigate, bear ing tho flag of Commodore Charles W. Mor gan ; Mississippi steam-frigate, Captain Long; and Cumberland frigate. At Leghorn—The Constitution frigate, Cap tain Conover. , AtSpezzia— The Jamestown corvette, Cap tain 8. Mercer. En rorte from Gibraltar, to Naples.—The St. Lawrence, Qaptain Spaulding; nndErie sloop. ISPTho Washington correspondent oftho Bal timore Sun suys •• I have witnessed, of late, no increasing Bigns of a disposition, north or south, to comprorniw the slavery questionj on the contrary, I think that Congress is further oli'uow than it ever has ikon from conciliation and cornpt'fonise. There is much less of conciliatory temper than hus bees heretofore. ;. ■ , The northern men, who until recently, have taken little share in the slavery discussion, hnvo got up their blood, and are hurling fierce deli- unco ut tho South. Horace Muun't speecli was u declaration of war. He declared that the North would not yield ail inch,even to.avert tlio calamities of civil war.-—Thaddeus Steven; preached a crusade against the ^accursed in stitution. Col. Bissel's spfeesh of to-day, wns full of scornful taunts, ami fiery, invective, Stod fierce denunciation- again.st.tho SmititqjfalCh |!f are men w^io are, addicted to. no ga*p«M ( 'i and they mean what they spy. •> > It appears to niB that the North hah assume* a higher and bolder tone tliun at any fiuvi 1 ^ time, and that tho argument on which they rfo is the sword. Gen. Cass’ speech in reply to Mr. Cle mons was tho warmest arid ipoet eloquent that hej has over delivered, and because it cam' from his heart. If his was not the tone of do fiance, it was that of despuir. He warned the South that'heir threats had driven the Mb* to the wall, and he declared emphatically, J 01 himself, that lie could not stand it- ! ||C . clqims made by Southern men in behalf >'■ slavery, na an institution, he utterly repudiauJq and, in‘fact, his whole speech consisted’^ objurgations against the South, and the expr Fi ' sion of a positive belief that the question » nil lead to civil war. . The editor of tho Charleston Courier, wlu> has road Mr. Cass’ speech as repbrtod in ^ Globe, snys—- We do not regard it as of the ultra chai artn represented. The expression P I can Stand 11 no longer” does not occur in it, w)r is there a") indication of a disposition, on his'part, ultitns 11 ly to take part against tho South. . New York Fashions—Tho Tribune snys it sees some times in Broadway a fashionable dressed lady leading a moderate sized Italian greyhound, with n scarlet monkey jacket round his shoulders, and reaching tc his middle. There arc puppies of another order h e ro. quite as fantastic in their dress, and who mofe resem ble tlie monkey than in tlieir jacket. . The Editor is ri^lit when lie reya there are ptlppies of another order in Gotham. ' A hind dog edits the Tribune. m HP Tho’debtof Virginia!* $7,540,291 lh arid tho other liabilities $9,003,685’! mak'ne 11 totul of $16,543,931. * Another Memorial to Congress.—L rial to Congress is now in 6irCfilntioi\in * n> '< delphia, praying Congress to grant a fire pie right tq- Tigra Island, irj the Pacific oocam to all such persons a* are dissatisfied WIt “ 1 S: Union. ’ They ore to take.all tlie rogues now the' penitentiaries and oinlshouses with . “ |e ^ Tho Sun sriys that the ojemorial-ls being BU,I ‘ erously signed.